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Israel must use its light to dispel the UN’s darkness

The Lubavitcher Rebbe’s words to Benjamin Netanyahu in 1984 are truer now than ever

December 31, 2024 09:51
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Francesca Albanese, U.N. special rapporteur, briefs reporters at U.N. headquarters (Loey Felipe/U.N. Photo/JNS)
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The year was 1984. Benjamin Netanyahu, then in his mid-thirties, had arrived in New York to serve as Israel’s seventh ambassador to the United Nations.

Settling down in Turtle Bay on the east side of midtown Manhattan, one of Netanyahu’s first meetings – with Lubavitcher Rebbe Menachem Mendel Schneerson – ended up being among his most memorable, not to mention prescient.

Meeting at 770 Eastern Parkway, the iconic headquarters of the Chabad-Lubavitch movement, on the eve of Simchat Torah, the rebbe offered Netanyahu advice as he began his tenure. “You will go into a house of lies,” he presaged, referring to the UN. “Remember that in a hall of perfect darkness, if you light one small candle, its precious light will be seen from afar, by everyone. Your mission is to light a candle for truth and for the Jewish people.” The rebbe’s words are truer today than ever before.

Last year at the UN was replete with moments of darkness, of isolation and demonisation, from unfounded accusations of genocide against Israel in a war Israel did not start – a war triggered by an Iran-backed genocidal rampage by Hamas into southern Israel – to General Assembly resolutions lambasting Israel for alleged “violations of international law” while paying scant attention to the 100 Israeli hostages who marked their second Chanukah in Hamas terror tunnels.